Does God have free will?

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Eddie L

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If the compatabilist view of free will is that we always act according to our strongest desire and because of that our will is not truly free, then does not God also act according to His strongest desire? How then is God's will free?

Look forward to your comments.

The bible never refers to 'freedom' in the sense of a libertarian free will. It refers to freedom in the sense of righteousness. In that sense, God is absolutely free.
 
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Eddie L

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Does that mean that when we go to heaven and finally stop sinning we will have free will to righteousness as well?

Not in a libertarian sense, but in the sense that our only influence will be from the Spirit of God. We will then be pure, or finally free.

To ever be "free" in a libertarian sense, to us, is to again be in bondage to sin, because ANYTHING that operates independently from the Spirit's influence is operating in sin. To us, choices indicate the power that is driving the chooser, and the driver is never neutral.
 
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elopez

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If the compatabilist view of free will is that we always act according to our strongest desire and because of that our will is not truly free, then does not God also act according to His strongest desire? How then is God's will free?
Remember, compatibilism still thinks there is free will, just not in the libertarian sense. So we act of our desires but we are still free. And yes, I would say that God also acts of His strongest desire. We can say, for example, that that would be creation. God's will is free as well, as He endows us with such freedom in the first place.
 
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splat

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To ever be "free" in a libertarian sense, to us, is to again be in bondage to sin, because ANYTHING that operates independently from the Spirit's influence is operating in sin. To us, choices indicate the power that is driving the chooser, and the driver is never neutral.

Interesting definition of sin. There are certainly things that would appear to be neutral like "taking a stroll" or "drinking a glass of water".
 
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